Hi Stork. I just change my PCI-E wifi card to a BCM943602CS kit with BT from Amazon. The problem I have now is that the system doesn't sleep. Sleeps for to seconds and wake up again. I tried boot with the internal BT USB disconnected and the system sleeps well so I think this has something to do with this internal USB connector. I tried the two ports at the bottom of the motherboard.

Some one in this forum told me that I have to create a custom SSDT to use with USBInjectAll.kext and map this port to be "build in". Now in my system report doesn't say is "build in".

Wow! I've never heard of that problem before. Can you boot directly into HS on your MacBook? If so, then I'd post the above in the UniBeast forum section to see what MacMan has to say about your MacBook/Clover/Windows problem.

I wanted to update this thread to let you know that I got it working a little while ago. I turned off BootCamp just in case. I found that my issue was that I did not format the USB as EFI before I used UniBeast (I did the normal format, but not EFI through the terminal). I didn't know of that requirement, and UniBeast did not complain when i created the USB drive.

I was wondering if you were able to get Bluetooth working via the onboard Bluetooth chipset of the motherboard or know where to figure it out? I haven't figured that one out, and it seems like most posts revolve around using a USB dongle instead.

Admin

I wanted to update this thread to let you know that I got it working a little while ago. I turned off BootCamp just in case. I found that my issue was that I did not format the USB as EFI before I used UniBeast (I did the normal format, but not EFI through the terminal). I didn't know of that requirement, and UniBeast did not complain when i created the USB drive...

Hmmm, I format the USB thumb drives as per the tonymacx86 guide(s) for installing macOS and have never run into that problem. However, I'm glad you found the solution to your problem.

I was wondering if you were able to get Bluetooth working via the onboard Bluetooth chipset of the motherboard or know where to figure it out? I haven't figured that one out, and it seems like most posts revolve around using a USB dongle instead.

Admin

I updated to High Sierra 10.13.4 from HS 10.13.3 following my procedures I wrote for the macOS 10.13.4 Update guide, Post #2, which I'll summarize here.

Backup your current installation using Carbon Copy Cloner or SuperDuper; Update your apfs.efi according to tonymacx86s guide How to Update + Current and Past apfs.efi Downloads; Don't reboot as the installer will do it several times (see below). Since I'm using a AMD RX 580 graphics card, I mounted the EFI partition and changed RadeonDeInit flag to No in the config.plist; If you're using Whatevergreen.kext, move it to the trash, download the latest version from Downloads > Kext menu (top right, this page) and move it to the Desktop for future use, if needed (I didn't need it); Modify your /EFI/EFI/Clover/config.plist file to replace the USB port limits patch with the patch in Post #84; Note: this replaces the existing Increase 15 Port Limit patch:

Download the High Sierra 10.13.4 Update or the Combo Update in Post #1 or the Update from Apple's Mac App Store and run it to update 10.13.3 ;

The updater will cause your system to reboot several times (see Post #52 for details); on my system, I downed the 10.13.4 Updater and experienced the following (YMMV): First and second reboots, at the Clover Boot menu, the default was "Boot FileVault Prebooter from Preboot" which was not what it should be; so I selected "Boot macOS Install Prebooter from Prebooot" > make sure that is selected; Third reboot again defaulted to "Boot FileVault Prebooter from Preboot" > change to "Boot Installed (your installation disk) and it will finish your installation;​

Upon rebooting into High Sierra after the last reboot, you can:

MyHero II's audio had to be "reinstalled", so I reran MultiBeast just selecting the following:

Thank you for all the work you have done for this organization. I have used your Thunderbolt build happily for quite a while now but it is getting a little old and since my wife is going away for 2 weeks this is a good time for building a new computer. 2 questions.
1. In post 36 you said High Sierra was buggy. Now I see you updated to 10.13.4 from 10.13.3. Do you find 10.13.4 stable enough for a build I use for a production system?

2. Is there any inference or worry to be drawn from this being a User build and not a Golden build? Seems like most posters get a good result from My Hero 2 and I thought my build would copy My Hero II (if I can find the Fenvi card.)

Admin

Thank you for all the work you have done for this organization. I have used your Thunderbolt build happily for quite a while now but it is getting a little old and since my wife is going away for 2 weeks this is a good time for building a new computer. 2 questions.
1. In post 36 you said High Sierra was buggy. Now I see you updated to 10.13.4 from 10.13.3. Do you find 10.13.4 stable enough for a build I use for a production system?

Yes. I can now recommend that folks upgrade to High Sierra 10.13.4. Sleep/wake-up works (got broken in 10.13.3) and, most importantly, full support for the RX and Vega graphics cards (although there are numerous reports of the Vegas fans operating at a high speed).

2. Is there any inference or worry to be drawn from this being a User build and not a Golden build? Seems like most posters get a good result from My Hero 2 and I thought my build would copy My Hero II (if I can find the Fenvi card.)

Yes. I can now recommend that folks upgrade to High Sierra 10.13.4. Sleep/wake-up works (got broken in 10.13.3) and, most importantly, full support for the RX and Vega graphics cards (although there are numerous reports of the Vegas fans operating at a high speed).

I was waiting to upgrade to HS 10.13.4 before moving it to a Golden Build. Thanks for reminding me. However, I have to get some free time to update Post #1's installation procedures before I move it.